- Revenue of $2.83 billion and non-GAAP EPS of $3.11 beat Wall Street forecasts, with expanded margins and cash flow.
- Outlook for Q3 2026 is positive, but broader industry shifts and competitive pressures temper long-term certainty.
What happened: Seagate surpasses forecasts in fiscal second quarter
Seagate Technology Holdings plc (NASDAQ: STX) reported fiscal second quarter 2026 results for the quarter ended 2 January 2026, showing $2.83 billion in revenue and a non-GAAP earnings per share (EPS) of $3.11, both ahead of market expectations. The company also generated strong cash flow, with $723 million from operations and $607 million in free cash flow, and declared a quarterly cash dividend of $0.74 per share. GAAP gross margin was 41.6 per cent, while non-GAAP gross margin was 42.2 per cent.
Seagate’s chief executive, Dave Mosley, noted that the performance was driven by robust demand for high-capacity storage, particularly from data centres managing exponential data growth. Seagate highlighted its innovations in high-density drives such as HAMR-based products as part of its growth strategy.
The company also provided guidance for fiscal third quarter 2026, forecasting approximately $2.90 billion in revenue and around $3.40 in non-GAAP EPS, both over consensus estimates — signalling continued confidence in demand momentum.
Also Read: https://btw.media/all/it-infrastructure/data-storage-and-cloud-scalability/
Why it’s important: interpreting results in context
Seagate’s results underscore the enduring relevance of mass-capacity storage in an era dominated by artificial intelligence, cloud computing and massive data workflows. Unlike solid-state storage (SSD), traditional hard disk drives (HDDs) such as Seagate’s offer cost-effective scale for storing exabytes of data, an advantage for large data centres that are expanding to support generative AI and analytics workloads. Recent industry reporting has emphasised that AI data centre demand is a key driver behind Seagate’s earnings beat and positive outlook.
However, the competition from rivals such as Western Digital — which has seen its own stock and analyst support rise on similar storage demand narratives — illustrates the intensifying battle for share in both HDD and hybrid storage segments.
Investors should also weigh cyclical inventory dynamics and macroeconomic pressures that influence demand from original equipment manufacturers (OEMs). While Seagate’s guidance reflects optimism, its ability to sustain growth through technological shifts — including the blending of HDD and SSD platforms in AI and cloud stacks — will be a key test for long-term strategic value.
Also Read: https://btw.media/all/tech-trends/ai-infrastructure-and-enterprise-storage/
